Los Angeles Police Department --- Dash Cam and Body Cameras of
On June 5, 2019, around 4:50
p.m., in the area of 150 N. Myers Street, officers assigned to
Hollenbeck Area Gang Enforcement Detail conducted a traffic stop on a
vehicle with tinted windows, a violation of 26708(a) of the Vehicle
Code. A male passenger ran from the vehicle and the officers chased him
on foot. The male, later identified as 27-year-old Jose Abel Iribe, was
armed with a handgun. Iribe did not comply with the officers' commands,
resulting in an officer-involved shooting. After being shot, Iribe threw
the handgun over a fence, where detectives later recovered it.

While the officers were attempting to take Iribe into custody, he
continued to refuse to follow the officers' commands. A TASER was used
and Iribe was taken into custody. He was transported to a local hospital
where he received medical treatment for a gunshot wound. No officers
were injured.

100K Subscribers!!! Thank You All!!!
✅My entire channel has been demonetized. If ever you want to support the
channel you could toss a $1 or $2 one-time tip or more if you want at:
💲https://www.paypal.me/VideoLeakPolice .

Or
🟡Bitcoin: 1D5dqpHKvBq5Kg6C1wjyt68cpTqYaod6Uf.

Thank you for watching and thank you for your support and help.

Rediscovering the Language of Values

By: David Hulme

A British acquaintance formerly in government recently observed that the
world is lacking the language of values. He commented further on the
need in his current profession for a revival of the terms of ethical
discourse. He has been shocked at the inability of leaders of various
kinds to apply such language to serious social issues.Is it
merely coincidence that right now a debate is developing in the United
Kingdom over the reinvigoration of the traditional family and its
responsibility for moral education and the instilling of values in the
young? The societal shifts that have compromised the family unit over
the past several decades have been blamed for the alienation and
associated violence that is plaguing the country. Almost every day the
news carries a story about a stabbing or shooting perpetrated by the
young on those more vulnerable.

Discussing a particularly brutal
attack by a gang of youths on a 50-year-old "best father anyone could
wish for," a British detective startled the morning TV audience by
admitting, "The police have lost control of the streets." His advice was
that no one should resist young hooligans unless sure of overcoming
them. Otherwise, he said, "they will kill you." He noted that the
British must just get used to the idea that a vast social change for the
worse is under way.All this begs the question: What happened to
the principle of treating others as we would want to be treated? It
seems obvious that an increasingly materialistic, self-absorbed and
morally ambivalent society is failing its children. Can there really be
any doubt that without family-based moral teaching, anarchy is the
natural outcome?Opposing voices say the problem is not the lack
of education in values and morality but rather the lack of shared
wealth. If poverty can be overcome, they believe alienation and street
violence will cease. It is both a familiar argument and a delusion that
plays to the worst in human nature. And it deeply divides those
concerned about social decline. But material possessions are not the
ground of moral behavior. There are examples in societies the world over
where the less privileged and their children hold on to fundamental
human values. Physical wealth may elude them, but they experience the
benefits of moral and ethical certainty. In contrast, many in the
affluent nations have lost that perspective.The present world
order is dominated by the pursuit of materialism and violence. It is a
system that is destined to fail in the absence of the language and
practice of right values. In an apocalyptic overview of a violent world
beset by false standards, the biblical author John records the anguish
of grieving merchants who cry out that "in one hour such great riches
came to nothing" (Revelation 18:17). Their trade is in every kind of
luxury item, but ominously also in the "bodies and souls of men" (verse
13). It is a system based on the get principle rather than on generosity
of spirit.

Jesus stood for very different values. He said, "Take
care, and be on your guard against all covetousness, for one’s life
does not consist in the abundance of his possessions" (Luke 12:15,
English Standard Version). A lack of such goods does not lead to
violence and alienation when right, godly values are in place. On the
contrary, there is recognition that the Father will provide all that is
necessary for life. Jesus spoke the language of right values and right
priorities when He taught, "Seek first the kingdom of God and his
righteousness [right values], and all these [material] things will be
added to you" (Matthew 6:33, ESV). David Hulme
holds a doctorate in International Relations from the University of
Southern California with an emphasis on the Middle East. He’s the author
of "Identity, Ideology and the Jerusalem Question" (Palgrave 2006) and
the blog Causes of Conflict. He is president of Vision Media Productions
and chairman of Vision.org Foundation. Please email David at
dhulme@vision.org.

Facebook Badge

US Sports Network

US Sports Network News! Having fun and helping the peeps'. Using Sports as a platform to Inform, Educate, Inspire, While Entertaining you with the best of sports, talk, music, and fun. Be on the lookout for our frequent 'Teachable Moments' This will be a sports and media experience like you never expected. We always welcome your feedback. If you like us or even if you don't, we are always going to love you! Thanks for stopping by!